China’s Newest Nuclear Submarine Sank, Setting Back Its Military Modernization. 1/2
Story by Michael R. Gordon • 10h
WASHINGTON—China’s newest nuclear-powered attack submarine sank in the spring, a major setback for one of the country’s priority weapons programs, U.S. officials said.
The episode, which Chinese authorities scrambled to cover up and hasn’t previously been disclosed, occurred at a shipyard near Wuhan in late May or early June.
It comes as China has been pushing to expand its navy, including its fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.
The Pentagon has cast China as its principal long-term “pacing challenge,” and U.S. officials say that Beijing has been using political and military pressure to try to coerce Taiwan, a separately governed island that Beijing claims as part of its territory.
China says its goal in building a world-class military is to deter aggression and safeguard its overseas interests. A spokesman for the Chinese embassy didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The U.S. doesn’t know if the sub was carrying nuclear fuel at the time it sank, but experts outside the U.S. government said that was likely.
Undersea technology has long been an area of U.S. advantage, but China has been pushing hard to narrow the gap.
China has been moving to diversify the production of nuclear-powered submarines. Production has been centered in the northeastern city of Huludao,but China is now moving to manufacture nuclear-powered attack submarines at the Wuchang Shipyard near Wuhan.(nothing good comes out of Wuhan)
Beijing had 48 diesel-powered attack subs and six nuclear-powered attack subs at the end of 2022, according to a Pentagon report issued last year on China’s military power,
That report said that China’s aim in developing new attack submarines, surface ships and naval aircraftis to counter efforts by the U.S. and its partners to come to Taiwan’s aid during a conflict and to achieve “maritime superiority” within the first island chain, a string of territory from the Japanese archipelago through Taiwan and the Philippines to the South China Sea.
The Zhou-class vessel that sank is the first of a new class ofChinese nuclear-powered subs and features a distinctive X-shaped stern, which is designed to make the vessel more maneuverable.
The sub was built by China State Shipbuilding Corp., a state-owned company, and was observed alongside a pier on the Yangtze River in late May when it was undergoing its final equipping before going to sea.
After the sinking,large floating cranes arrived in early June to salvage the sub from the river bed,according to satellite photos of the site.
The sinking of a new nuclear sub that was produced at a new yard will slow China’s plans to grow its nuclear submarine fleet,” said Brent Sadler, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington think tank, and a retired U.S. Navy nuclear submarine officer. “This is significant.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/china-s-newest-nuclear-submarine-sank-setting-back-its-military-modernization/ar-AA1rg9JK